The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) has clarified that Federal Banks are now permitted to carry out “certain cryptocurrency activities.” Industry leaders have described this as the biggest news of the week, and the OCC now confirms that the war on crypto is officially over.
The OCC, Federal Banks, and Crypto
On March 7, the OCC published Interpretive Letter 1183, which clarified banks’ participation in crypto-asset custody. Federal Banks can also participate in certain stablecoin activities to reaffirm their role in the payment sector.
In addition to these two, the OCC said banks may engage in some Decentralized Finance (DeFi) activities. These include taking up an independent role in node verification for blockchain protocols.
In addition to these allowances, the Currency Comptroller also rolled back the need for licenses by banks before participating in these DeFi activities. Ultimately, the OCC clarified that banks may also pursue these crypto activities without proof that they have “adequate controls in place before they can engage in these cryptocurrency activities.”
As part of its broad pivot in digital asset regulation, the OCC said it has withdrawn “its participation in the joint statement on crypto-asset risks to banking organizations and the joint statement on liquidity risks to banking organizations resulting from crypto-asset market vulnerabilities.”
End To Operation Chokepoint 2.0
Unlike the Federal Deposit Insurance Commission (FDIC), Coinbase was involved in Operation Chokepoint 2.0, while the OCC was more conservative. The current Interpretive Letter confirms that Operation Chokepoint 2.0 has ended.
During the Presidential Campaign last year, President Donald Trump promised to end all war on crypto. With banks now free to engage in core crypto activities, the doors to more mainstream adoption are opened.
The White House Crypto Summit, held on March 7, also underscores the urgency of digital asset regulation. During the Summit, President Trump promised to have key crypto bills signed by August this year.
Federal Banks and Crypto Competition
While allowances for banks are welcome in the industry, some leaders disagree on the grand governmental involvement. With billions in Assets Under Management (AUM), critics believe mainstream banks may bring unhealthy competition in the market.
Already, top banks are buying Bitcoin through ETF products, which they may now do directly through the OCC directive. Solana Founder Anatoly Yakovenko believes government involvement can alter the decentralization tenet of the broader crypto industry.
The OCC Crypto Summit update has not changed the sentiment in the broader market. Following the summit, Bitcoin dropped 4.06% to $86,600, dragging altcoins along.
Ark Invest, the asset management firm owned by Cathie Wood, has gained its first exposure to Solana as the broader financial market expands its adoption of cryptocurrencies. The firm has added exposure to two tech investment vehicles via the 3iQ Solana Staking ETF (SOLQ). Market analysts believe this move validates SOL, a front-runner for spot altcoin ETF in the US.
The Ark Invest Solana Exposure
According to the Citywire report, the ARK Next Generation Internet ETF (ARKW) and ARK Fintech Innovation ETF (ARKF) have SOLQ in their respective portfolios. These Cathie Wood’s funds bought 237,500 shares of SOLQ apiece, validating the Solana fundamentals.
Canadian regulators approved the 3iQ SOL ETF for trading earlier this month, alongside other crypto funds from Purpose, Evolve, and CI. These ETF products went live on schedule on April 16, placing them in line for mainstream exposure.
As Ark Invest revealed in its press release, the Solana architecture and its design for speed and efficiency make it ideal for the next generation of the internet. With the bet, the Cathie Wood firm has made history as the first U.S.-based ETF to gain exposure to Solana.
Beyond Ark Invest and Solana: Portfolio Diversification Goes Mainstream
Asset management firms are shifting toward crypto products, a move beyond ARK and SOL. As CoinGape reported earlier, Charles Schwab has revealed plans to launch crypto trading later this year. The firm, with $10 trillion in assets under management, may add more credence to the nascent asset class if it pulls through with its plans.
Under President Donald Trump, the improving crypto regulation landscape has given asset managers like Ark Invest the long-sought leverage to bet on the market. The precedent was set earlier with spot Bitcoin and Ethereum ETF approval in 2024.
With key agencies like the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Commodity Futures and Trading Commission (CFTC), and Federal Deposit Insurance Commission (FDIC) now aligned to crypto, more firms may soon join the diversification move.
Crypto ETFs and Role In TradFi Embrace
Despite the generally positive regulatory environment, many traditional financial firms are still skeptical of direct exposure to crypto. While many, like Ark Invest, do not mind the volatility, custody remains a major challenge.
More relatable products like Spot XRP ETF have been lodged with the SEC to mitigate this. With asset managers going all out in their bid, Solana, Hedera, Litecoin, and Dogecoin, among other assets, are also awaiting potential approvals from the SEC.
While the market regulator was skeptical of these kinds of products in the past, it now takes a different stance. Market experts expect approval before the end of this year.
Welcome to the US Crypto News Morning Briefing—your essential rundown of the most important developments in crypto for the day ahead.
Grab a coffee as we analyze Standard Chartered’s Bitcoin (BTC) price projections. According to the bank, Bitcoin price could hit $500,000 as global institutions accumulate Strategy’s MSTR stock for indirect exposure to Bitcoin.
Crypto News of the Day: Standard Chartered’s Bold Bitcoin Prediction
Bitcoin was trading for $105,178, up by a modest 2.27% in the last 24 hours. In recent developments, the pioneer crypto market capitalization has ascended to an all-time high of $2.09 trillion.
However, analysts hold that institutional interest has much to do with Bitcoin’s value surge. Firstly, Bitcoin ETFs (exchange-traded funds), which offer Traditional Finance (TradFi) players indirect exposure to BTC, drive institutional interest.
In the same way, institutions are gaining indirect exposure to Bitcoin via Strategy’s MSTR stock. A recent US Crypto News publication indicated that Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) held 576,230 BTC as of May 19.
Holding a significant amount of Bitcoin on its balance sheet, Strategy’s MSTR stock price correlates closely with Bitcoin’s price movements.
MSTR vs. BTC performance in the past year. Source: ivanhoff.com on X
Analysts ascribe this correlation to a dynamic where Bitcoin is the base layer while MSTR operates as a vehicle with different risks, mechanics, and rewards.
Against this backdrop, BeInCrypto contacted Geoff Kendrick, Head of Digital Assets Research at Standard Chartered. According to Kendrick, Bitcoin is still on course to hit $500,000 before the end of Trump’s second administration.
Kendrick ascribes this to deepening institutional adoption, particularly through indirect exposure via MicroStrategy’s MSTR shares.
Standard Chartered Says Increasing Allocations to MSTR Is Bullish for Bitcoin
Newly released Q1 2025 13F filings from the US SEC (Securities and Exchange Commission) support the bank’s bullish thesis. Specifically, Strategy saw increasing allocations to MSTR by a range of global sovereign and quasi-sovereign entities.
“As more investors gain access to the asset and as volatility falls, we believe portfolios will migrate towards their optimal level from an underweight starting position in Bitcoin,” Kendrick said in an email to BeInCrypto.
While direct holdings of Bitcoin ETFs declined slightly overall, largely due to the State of Wisconsin Investment Board selling its entire 3,400 BTC-equivalent position in BlackRock’s IBIT ETF, other entities quietly increased exposure via MSTR, which Kendrick described as a “Bitcoin proxy.”
“Government entities increased their holdings of Strategy Incorporated (MSTR), which typically trades like a Bitcoin proxy. Entities in Norway, Switzerland, and South Korea reported significant MSTR increases, and Saudi Arabia added a very small position for the first time,” Kendrick told BeInCrypto.
The Standard Chartered executive emphasized that while Bitcoin ETF flows were “unexciting,” the MSTR accumulation trend was the real story this quarter.
“The MSTR ownership detail was where the excitement was,” he added.
Geoff Kendrick went further, detailing Standard Chartered’s analysis of the filings. Based on their analysis:
Norway added 700 BTC-equivalent via MSTR, now holding 6,300 BTC-equivalent.
Switzerland also added 700 BTC-equivalent, reaching 2,300 BTC-equivalent.
South Korea added 700 BTC-equivalent, bringing its total to 1,300 BTC-equivalent.
US state funds (California, New York, North Carolina, Kentucky) added 1,000 BTC-equivalent collectively, now at 3,300 BTC-equivalent.
Saudi Arabia’s Central Bank opened a small MSTR position—its first.
Meanwhile, Abu Dhabi’s quasi-sovereign wealth fund Mubadala added 300 BTC equivalent via ETF holdings, increasing its position to 5,000 BTC equivalent.
“SEC 13F data for Q1 supports our thesis that Bitcoin is attracting a wider range of buyers. While data on Bitcoin ETF holdings was disappointing, MSTR – a Bitcoin proxy – saw increased buying. Overall sovereign positions were unchanged due to the Wisconsin pension fund selling its ETF holdings,” Kendrick concluded.
The data reinforce Standard Chartered’s outlook that institutional and sovereign flows—both direct and indirect—will be a key driver of Bitcoin’s ascent to $500,000 in the coming years.
Chart of the Day
Governement holdings of BTC ETFs and MSTR. Source: Standard Chartered
This chart illustrates the total government holdings of Bitcoin ETFs and MicroStrategy’s MSTR stock from Q4 2023 to Q1 2025, measured in ‘000 (thousands) BTC equivalents. Based on the chart, holdings have grown steadily, peaking in Q1 2025 at around 18,000 BTC.
The chart shows that key contributors include Abu Dhabi (ETFs), Norway, Sweden, South Korea, France, New York, Wisconsin (ETFs), Michigan (ETFs), Switzerland, Liechtenstein, California, North Carolina, Saudi Arabia, and Kentucky, with varying contributions across quarters.
Byte-Sized Alpha
Here’s a summary of more US crypto news to follow today:
The emergence of fractional ownership of real-world assets represents a turning point in investment paradigms. This shift has had a pronounced impact on Gen Z and new investors, who face distinct economic challenges. Young people struggle with significant student loan debt or face the risk of lower initial earnings. Over 40% of Americans under 30